Evolutionary Innovation Viewed as Novel Physical Phenomena and Hierarchical Systems Building
Tim Taylor

TL;DR
This paper presents a framework for understanding evolutionary innovation as either discovering new physical phenomena or creating new persistent systems, expanding on previous models of open-ended evolution.
Contribution
It generalizes and expands previous concepts by integrating the POA perspective, linking innovations to novel physical phenomena or environmental systems creation.
Findings
All evolutionary innovations are either new physical phenomena or new persistent environmental systems.
The framework unifies different types of innovation under a common perspective.
It extends previous models by incorporating the POA approach for a broader understanding.
Abstract
In previous work I proposed a framework for thinking about open-ended evolution. The framework characterised the basic processes required for Darwinian evolution as: (1) the generation of a phenotype from a genetic description; (2) the evaluation of that phenotype; and (3) the reproduction with variation of successful genotype-phenotypes. My treatment emphasized the potential influence of the biotic and abiotic environment, and of the laws of physics/chemistry, on each of these processes. I demonstrated the conditions under which these processes can allow for ongoing exploration of a space of possible phenotypes (which I labelled exploratory open-endedness). However, these processes by themselves cannot expand the space of possible phenotypes and therefore cannot account for the more interesting and unexpected kinds of evolutionary innovation (such as those I labelled expansive and…
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Taxonomy
TopicsComplex Systems and Decision Making
